Stargate SG-1: The Barque of Heaven is a novel by Fandemonium, which was written by Suzanne Wood.
Publishers Summary[]
Through the underworld...
Millennia ago, at the height of his power, the System Lord Ra decreed that any Goa'uld wishing to serve him must endure a great trial. Victory meant power and prestige, defeat brought banishment and death.
On a routine expedition to an abandoned Goa’uld world, SG-1 inadvertently initiate Ra's ancient trial – and once begun, the trial cannot be halted. Relying on Dr. Daniel Jackson’s vast wealth of knowledge, Colonel O'Neill must lead his team from planet to planet, completing each task in the allotted time. There is no rest, no respite. To stop means being trapped forever in the farthest reaches of the galaxy, and to fail means death.
Victory is their only option in this terrible test of endurance – an ordeal that will try their will, their ingenuity, and above all their bonds of friendship.
Authors summary[]
The Stargate SG-1 team find themselves transported to a world where they must solve a series of riddles and avoid deadly traps in order to travel home. Pursued by Goa'uld and Jaffa, it is a race against death to the finish line.
Chronological Placement[]
The events depicted in this adventure take place during season three of Stargate SG-1, following the episode Deadman Switch and before Forever in a Day.
Publishers Extract[]
An extract from chapter 12:
Jack looked around, through the little clouds of his breath condensing in the still, frigid air. Maybe this niche in the tunnel walls would offer a few moments’ respite. No movement showed in the passage they had just raced through. Ahead, another tunnel angled away into the darkness, offering at least somewhere else to run.
His team gathered near him, faces turned toward the tunnels and watchful for any hint of pursuit. Carter balanced on her left leg as she scanned the darkness, denying the ache in her right ankle, twisted on the treacherously slick rock. Teal’c faced the opposite direction, alert as ever, yet his utter weariness could be seen in his slumped shoulders and slowing movements, his skin an unhealthy grayish hue.
Daniel was leaning against the dank wall, the façade of stubbornness on his face slipping as surely as his body was sliding down the uneven rocks, his lungs now emitting little more than a distressed wheeze. His left fist was still firmly planted on the pain below his ribs.
Jack shifted, vainly trying to ease the muscles knotted along his spine and the stabbing pain that had been his constant companion for what seemed like his entire life.
How the hell did we end up like this?
Movement flickered in the corner of his eye — Carter’s hand coming up and signaling they were about to be discovered.
He sucked in a gasp of cold air, reached over and grabbed a fistful of Daniel's shirt, helping his teammate as they staggered off in Teal’c's wake — plunging on into the unknown.
Within seconds SG-1 had vanished into the darkness, the eternal rock showing no trace of their passing.
References[]
- Bacis
- Bes
- Books of Djehuti
- Dashani
- Fourth Prime
- Jehen'u
- Goa'uld 1
- Goa'uld 2
- Goa'uld 3
- Goa'uld 4
- Goa'uld 5
- Goa'uld 6
- Goa'uld 7
- Miseanu
- Tel'es
- Sokar
- Aris Boch
- Mat
- Amaunet
- Sha're
- Jolinar of Malkshur
- Cronus
- Ka
- Mt. Rushmore
- Neural transmitter
- Sidhe
- Trial of Ra
- P3R-779
- Barque of Heaven
- Trial of Moons
Notes of Interest[]
- During the course of the novel, it is suggested that Ra was not actually a Goa'uld- hence explaining the differences between Ra in the film and the other Goa'uld subsequently seen in the TV series- but was somehow connected to the Ancients, thus granting him access to an Ancient-style servant known as Bes who oversees the trials until SG-1 pass them for the final time.
- In the novel, SG-1 learns that the bounty mentioned for them by Aris Boch was actually set by a Goa'uld System Lord named Mat who was seeking revenge for the death of Ra. The bounty, which is never mentioned again in the show, is covered in the novel in what it entailed. Its mentioned that if Teal'c had been turned over to Sokar, Sokar would have simply sent him to P3R-779 as per the bounty.
- During the novel, Daniel presses Carter on the fact that Jolinar of Malkshur claimed to know where to find Sha're. In the novel, after killing Mat, Carter gains one of Jolinar's memories showing that she really did know, having been present when Amaunet went to Mat for safe passage. This provides a possible explanation for how SG-1 located Amaunet in "Forever in a Day."
External links[]
- Stargate SG-1: The Barque of Heaven on Fandemonium
- Stargate SG-1: The Barque of Heaven on Amazon UK
- Stargate SG-1: The Barque of Heaven on Amazon US
- Fandemonium on Facebook
- Fandemonium on Twitter